From Theresa: We built our tiny wildlife pond in 2012, and it immediately started to attract wildlife, including dragonflies, snails, water beetles, birds, squirrels, and chipmunks. We built it hoping for frogs, because I love falling asleep listening to their calls. In its second summer we had one resident frog, but there weren't many mating calls. This Summer, we were serenaded for many nights by calls from the American Toad, tree frogs, and a third frog we couldn't identify. And this time it resulted in a pond full of hundreds of tadpoles, which have now become incredibly tiny frogs!!

"We're sunbathing and she's taking pictures of us- How rude!"

Frog with a Duckweed Hat(Theresa was trying to clean some of the duckweed out of the pond, and was surprised to scoop up a frog along with the duckweed.):

King of the Mountain:

King looking for a smaller mountain:

They began as tadpoles....

We first noticed tiny tadpoles in our pond on 6-6-2015:

Then the gang got bigger (6-12-15):

By 7-11-15 the tadpoles started to get legs (Bear says we should call them frogpoles):

Then they lost their tails and became frogs!(Walking on water with the help of duckweed):

This American Toad could be one of the parents (dad or mom, we have no clue):

The Habitat:

This is the wildlife pond we built, although Bear says it looks like a swamp since it's covered with duckweed. It's been amazing to sit next to the pond every day and discover first hand how tadpoles turn into frogs, knowing that we played a tiny role in supporting new life.